Cooper v. Board of Ada County Commissioners

534 P.2d 1096, 96 Idaho 656, 1975 Ida. LEXIS 470
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1975
Docket11525
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 534 P.2d 1096 (Cooper v. Board of Ada County Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. Board of Ada County Commissioners, 534 P.2d 1096, 96 Idaho 656, 1975 Ida. LEXIS 470 (Idaho 1975).

Opinion

SHEPARD, Justice.

This is an appeal from a decision of the district court which in turn upon appeal *657 had affirmed a decision of the county commissioners of Ada County denying an application for a conditional use permit. The permit was sought to authorize the construction of a mobile home park in Ada County.

In early 1972 appellants Cooper and Wells, as partners, acquired a 34-acre tract of land located in Ada County near the intersection of Hill and Collister Roads on the outskirts of Boise. The land was located within a zone designated “R-2” under the provisions of the applicable Zoning Ordinance. 1 Appellants sought to construct a 200 unit mobile home park known as Singing Hills on that site. Under the provisions of the zoning ordinance, a mobile home park is not a principal permitted use in an R-2 zone, but is enumerated as a conditional use under the provisions of § 7.4 of the Zoning Ordinance. 2

Appellants applied for such conditional use permit in the spring of 1972, which application was denied by the Ada County Planning and Zoning Commission. That denial was affirmed by the Ada County Commissioners, and appellants thereafter took an appeal to the district court. The district court held that the denial of appellants’ application was predicated upon unconstitutional criteria and hence that the Planning and Zoning Commission and the Board of County Commissioners had acted arbitrarily and capriciously in their denial of the application. The district court reversed the denial of the application and remanded the matter for reconsideration.

Upon remand from the district court, the Planning and Zoning Commission again denied the application, basing that denial upon the application’s failure to satisfy Section 24.2591 of the Zoning Ordinance which requires that a trailer court or mobile home court must, if located in an R-2 Zone, “front (or have direct access to), a State, Primary or Secondary Highway or County Major Arterial as designated in the Ada County Major Thoroughfare Plan” (hereinafter referred to as the “arterial access requirement”). That decision of the Planning and Zoning Commission was affirmed by the county commissioners of Ada County, and the appellants took a second appeal therefrom to the district court. The district court found that the proposed development did not front upon or have direct access to a state primary or secondary *658 highway or a county major arterial, found that the arterial access requirement was valid, and found that the Planning and Zoning Commission and the county commissioners had not acted arbitrarily or capriciously in refusing to issue the permit. The decision denying appellants’ application was affirmed. This appeal results.

It is clear that appellants’ proposed development would not front upon or have direct access to a state primary or secondary highway and that it would not front upon or have direct access to a county major arterial. The project and the application therefor thus fail to satisfy the condition imposed by the Ordinance for construction of a mobile home park in an R-2 zone. The only substantial question on this appeal is the validity of the Ordinance’s requirement of access to a county major arterial. Appellants contend that this requirement is arbitrary and lacks substantial relation to a legitimate legislative purpose and therefore violates appellants’ federal and state constitutional rights to due process and equal protection of the law.

Although respondents argue otherwise, we hold that these issues were raised in the lower court and may thus be argued upon appeal. The pretrial order in the lower court identifies the validity of the Ordinance as a proper exercise of the police power as an issue to be tried in the lower court, and the findings of the district court set forth that appellants (applicants below) had failed to demonstrate that the Ordinance was applied unconstitutionally.

Appellants assert two constitutional bases for the invalidity of the Ordinance. First, appellants assert invalidity in that mobile home courts must satisfy the arterial access requirement while conventional housing developments are free from such a requirement. They secondly assert that their development would have direct access to a modified arterial and argue that an unconstitutionally arbitrary distinction has been drawn between a major arterial as contrasted with a modified arterial.

In Cole-Collister Fire Protection District v. City of Boise, 93 Idaho 558, 468 P.2d 290 (1970), this court invalidated an ordinance as applied to certain property which had been zoned as a limited office district but which was surrounded by commercial establishments. Therein the right of a local legislative body to enact zoning ordinances was reaffirmed, but such ordinance was required to have a reasonable connection to a goal legitimately related to the police power. Appellants place heavy reliance upon Cole-Collister. There is however a critical difference between Cole-Collister and the instant case. In Cole-Collister the lower court determined that the ordinance in question was invalid; in the instant case the lower court found the ordinance to be valid. In Cole-Collister the court pointed out that the “burden of proof” (that the ordinance is invalid), in the sense that this term refers to the “risk of nonpersuasion of the trier of facts,” remains upon the party asserting the invalidity. The ultimate burden of persuasion rests upon the litigant who attacks the validity of the ordinance. Cole-Collister Fire Protection District v. City of Boise, supra; Hendricks v. City of Nampa, 93 Idaho 95, 456 P.2d 262 (1969). The district court in the instant case found that appellants Cooper and Wells had “failed to carry their burden of proof.” On appeal appellants have not shown that determination to be erroneous. Morrison v. Quality Produce, Inc., 92 Idaho 448, 444 P.2d 409 (1968).

Most of the appellants’ evidence relating to the arterial access requirement was directed at the day-to-day automobile traffic that would be generated by the proposed project. At least one of appellants’ witnesses, after criticizing the arterial access requirement, refused to state conclusively that it was unreasonable. On the other hand, testimony adduced by the respondent indicated that the access require *659 ment of the ordinance was reasonable when viewed in the generation of day-today automobile traffic by developments such as that of appellants.

Perhaps the chief argument for the arterial access requirement is contained in Residential Policy Fifteen of the Ada County Comprehensive Plan. Ada County Zoning Ordinance Section 1.1 requires that the zoning ordinance be administered in conformance with that Ada County Comprehensive Plan. The Comprehensive Plan states:

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Related

Dawson Enterprises, Inc. v. Blaine County
567 P.2d 1257 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1977)
Estes v. City of Moscow
539 P.2d 275 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1975)

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Bluebook (online)
534 P.2d 1096, 96 Idaho 656, 1975 Ida. LEXIS 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-board-of-ada-county-commissioners-idaho-1975.